Seidman takes the angle that Jewish students at McGill University feel The Daily, one of the student newspapers, is thwarting their efforts to speak out about how the Boycott, Divest, and Sanction movement against Israel makes them uncomfortable. Tensions escalated, she writes, after The Daily published a satirical piece titled, “White tears increase on campus,” which pokes fun at the sensitivity of white people towards confronting their own racial privilege.

Concordia University Foundation has an estimated ten per cent of its investments placed in the fossil fuel industry, which includes oils and pipelines, according to Freedman. This is difficult to know exactly, he said, because there are no detailed breakdowns of their investments.

So we got through POP—trust, it’s easier said than done. Among some of the unlikely things to happen, we managed to scrape by with few instances of drinking on the metro and peeing in alleyways. Here’s the recap on all the crazy shows we went to:

Two proposals—one by the university and the other by students—were raised to resolve a contentious university bylaw that prevents students from serving on Senate, the Board of Governors, and other Concordia bodies if they’ve been sanctioned under the school’s Code of Rights and Responsibilities within the past three years.

Concordia Student Union general elections begin on March 29 and run until March 31. There are five referendum questions on the ballot that could affect the fees you pay and whether you oppose the construction of a pipeline.

The Concordia Student Union has officially transferred $1.85 million into the Popular University Student Housing fund with the goal of creating an affordable student housing cooperative for Concordia undergraduate students.